Dame Dash Confronts Lee Daniels About His 2 Million Dollars

Kool

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Yea he was mad, as he should be but that was anger mixed with that broke desperate. Its like you loaning a nikka your last 20 to get in the club and he in their poppin bottles. Dame was hurt :dame:

Damn he must need that money bad to run up on ol boy that way, usually you just let the lawyers do what they do

This. Dame probably broke as fukk. That nikka need that money. LOL
 

Ayo

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this doesn't change my argument bruh...dame was hurting in 2015 too :pachaha:

he's suing him for a movie that was shot in 2008, which means he probably loaned him the money in '07 or possibly earlier.

again - one of them is broke, the other is highly successful with hit shows on FOX. Daniels is loaded.

Dame also invested in a movie called THE WOODSMAN, do you see him hounding the director of that film for his money back?

I'll say it again because you missed it: I don't like EITHER of these negroes - but what dame is doing is highly unusual in the industry.

Dame gave him money long before Precious.

Nikka’s here are interpreting “you didn’t even invite me to Precious” as Dame wanting an invite to a premiere or something. That’s not it.

What Dame means is that Lee didn’t give him an opportunity to be involved (most likely an executive producer credit, which would have probably paid him back) in something as big as Precious. Even though Dame gave him that money with the intention of it being paid back.
 

panopticon

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Some myths about how business is actually done need to be dispelled here.

If any of you have ever worked in finance, or witnessed the daily operations of a trading floor where literally tens of billions of dollars in value are exchanged on a daily basis, you know that handshake deals are par for the course.

Once a trader tells another trader "done" over the phone, the deal is done. His word is his bond. Or he'll never work anywhere again.

Do the back-office folks eventually catch up with the paperwork? Sure. But that can take a whole damn quarter to reconcile.

Meanwhile, that same security can be traded away the next day, bought again the following week, sold again the following month...all on the strength of a phone conversation.

In the meantime, each party to the transaction writes down exactly what he bought (or sold), who he transacted with, and when the transaction took place.

We had a major financial crisis less than 10 years ago. How many mortgage traders went back on their word, trying to claim they never bought those subprime mortgages? How many traders who sold credit default swaps or put options tried to back out of their obligations when the financing & equities markets crashed and companies were going bankrupt left and right?

None. Hundreds of billions of dollars in losses, and yet none of them tried to weasel on what were mostly verbal agreements made quicker than any back-office could hope to catch up to in real-time.

Dame clearly approaches business in the same way. To him, what's important is establishing and nurturing the relationship with an artist, and focusing on the work. Not making sure every "i" is dotted and every "t" is crossed. He assumes that those he works with are similarly focused, and will pay what they owe when they're able.

Dame's approach has mostly worked in his favor. There's a reason that he was the one who discovered & promoted Kanye - while his competitors were spending their time thinking of ways to design the perfect recording contract to maximally exploit rappers & singers, Dame was establishing a real relationship and spending actual time and effort helping Kanye develop as an artist.

I sense more than a little :mjpls: from nikkas on here when Dame and his approach to business comes up. As though he isn't intelligent or sophisticated enough to put together recording contracts and financing agreements.

Is the dude loud? Yes. Obnoxious? Absolutely. But he isn't stupid.

Dame had every right to pull up on Lee. There are some real shameless nikkas out there - or at least shameless in their private dealings. Sometimes, putting them on blast in front of their social set is the only way to force them to do the right thing.
 

Marlo Barksdale

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Stop defending that clown. When he was in top he had nothing to say about these so called culture vultures. He went on the radio and put down his own people who work 9 to 5 jobs.

I wish the worst on him!

He's always been against culture vultures and called em out since day one. He was speaking the truth to 9 to 5 job workers.:umad:
 

Dzali OG

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Some myths about how business is actually done need to be dispelled here.

If any of you have ever worked in finance, or witnessed the daily operations of a trading floor where literally tens of billions of dollars in value are exchanged on a daily basis, you know that handshake deals are par for the course.

Once a trader tells another trader "done" over the phone, the deal is done. His word is his bond. Or he'll never work anywhere again.

Do the back-office folks eventually catch up with the paperwork? Sure. But that can take a whole damn quarter to reconcile.

Meanwhile, that same security can be traded away the next day, bought again the following week, sold again the following month...all on the strength of a phone conversation.

In the meantime, each party to the transaction writes down exactly what he bought (or sold), who he transacted with, and when the transaction took place.

We had a major financial crisis less than 10 years ago. How many mortgage traders went back on their word, trying to claim they never bought those subprime mortgages? How many traders who sold credit default swaps or put options tried to back out of their obligations when the financing & equities markets crashed and companies were going bankrupt left and right?

None. Hundreds of billions of dollars in losses, and yet none of them tried to weasel on what were mostly verbal agreements made quicker than any back-office could hope to catch up to in real-time.

Dame clearly approaches business in the same way. To him, what's important is establishing and nurturing the relationship with an artist, and focusing on the work. Not making sure every "i" is dotted and every "t" is crossed. He assumes that those he works with are similarly focused, and will pay what they owe when they're able.

Dame's approach has mostly worked in his favor. There's a reason that he was the one who discovered & promoted Kanye - while his competitors were spending their time thinking of ways to design the perfect recording contract to maximally exploit rappers & singers, Dame was establishing a real relationship and spending actual time and effort helping Kanye develop as an artist.

I sense more than a little :mjpls: from nikkas on here when Dame and his approach to business comes up. As though he isn't intelligent or sophisticated enough to put together recording contracts and financing agreements.

Is the dude loud? Yes. Obnoxious? Absolutely. But he isn't stupid.

Dame had every right to pull up on Lee. There are some real shameless nikkas out there - or at least shameless in their private dealings. Sometimes, putting them on blast in front of their social set is the only way to force them to do the right thing.

I'm reading this thread like :gucci: nikkas really hating on dame.

At one point when I knew no better, I wasn't a fan either. Now that I know better, I wish the brother all the success in the world. I hope he comes out on top and I wish I could run into him and cop his ear a few min.
 
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